Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 20, 1951, edition 1 / Page 7
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THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE SEVEXT TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1231 Aboil Of Commerce School Asked eace -.Must" First Enter Man's Heart: HesBurgh A bill to abolish the commerce school and m&ke the space oc cupied by this school available 1o the remaining departments of th University will be debated by the Pi Senate at its meeting tonight on the third floor of New West building at 8 pjna. The commerce school,. according to the bill, has "virtually elimi nated all courses except those per taining to commerce. . Except in business colleges and engineering schools, it is further claimed, "a good education is con sidered to be a general ope in- eluding courses in many fields," and the University "is neither a business college not an engineer ing school. "The departments of this uni versity other than the commerce school need additional space for expansion,' it is added. Playmakers Set Tryouts' Tryouts for the Playmakers second student production of the season will be held at the theatre- - on Tuesday, November 20th, at 4 o'clock. All students, faculty and their wives, and Chapel Hill ians are eligible to audition. A bill of. three one-act plays will be produced on December th and 7th, and as usual, there are a wide variety of excellent character roles to be east. The plays are not yet selected, but they will be scripts written by students in the ,p 1 a y w r i t i n g courses here. The corps of three directors are chosen from gradu ate students in the dramatic art department. S the obvious solution, accord- "Before peace can come to this earth, it must come first to the hearts of the men and wom en who people this earth," The Reverend Theodore M. Hes burgh, executive vice-president and head of the religion depart ment of Notre Dame University, told a congregation in Hill Hall Sunday night as he spoke on "The True Meaning of Peace." - In his first trip to North Caro lina, Rev. Hesburgh, who is also chairman of the Board in Con trol of Athletics at the South Bend school, was speaking under the sponsorship of the Universi ty Sermons Committee of -the YWCA, . "There has never been a time in the world when peace was so strongly sought and still so pre carious. Aom bombs do not des criminate against Northerners or Southerners, Protestants or Catholics, white or colored,' he said. But the Catholic priest added, 'There is a sure way to the most important kind of peace, inward peace. If you are not inwardly at peace there is something wrong inside, and you must try to do something about it. It must be individually achieved." Father Hesburgh stressed that before political peace can be a reality, the people of the. earth must find this inward peace. , "The glory of God and peace of the soul are gained together by men of good will and they are lost together by men of ill will, he exclaimed. The combined Glee Clubs of the University furnished xspecial music for the service by render ing "Alia Trinta" and "Onward Ye People." Ruba show o : bfar flete ing to the bill, is to eliminate the commerce school as pare of the University's education facilities and give the space thereby made available to the remaining depart ments of the University, Grad School Has Large Enrollment The Graduate School has one of the largest enrollments in its historyaround 1,000 students. The enrollment is double the pre-t war figure. Several years ago Dr. Edwin Mims, distinguished South ern scholar and writer of Van- derbilt University, made the sig nificant statement that "taken all in all, the University of North Carolina now has a better aca demic faculty and a better School than any other institution in the South. I doubt if there is any faculty in the country that, in proportion to numbers, is doing more genuinely scholarly work. Everybody has written a book or an article or a monograph, or is reading proof on one, or collect ing notes for one." "One of the finest all-around casts ever assembled for any Play- maker show." That's what Direc tor Kai Jurgensen has to say for his cast of 26, who will give six evening performances of Sidney Kingsley's vivid three-act drama of - Russian political terrorism, "Darkness At Noon," at the Caro lina Playmakers theatre. The production dates are Tues day through Sunday evenings, No vember 27-December 2nd, at 8;30. Tickets are on sale in Swain Hall and Ledbetter-Pickard's. Fred Young will play the leading role of N. S. Kubashov, a former member of the Soviet Central Committee and General of the Red Army, now imprisoned for opposing Stalin's dictatorship Young is a veteran of some 15 Playmaker productions and i s considered one of the most versa tile actors ' developed here in re cent years. - Rubashov5 clandestine sweet heart, lovely and voluptuous Luba Loshenko, is portrayed by Anne Edwardsl She will be making her debut on the local stage, although she has accumulated much prev- ious experience with the Alcazar Theatre, Baltimore, the Parkway Playhouse, Burnsville, and the Women's College Play-lakers. Robert Thomas will handle the -difficult role of Gletkin, brutal and stupid state prosecutor who interrogates Rubashov. :1 mm & On Carolina's basketball sche dule for 1951-52 are games with Bradley - University, Illinois and Southern California. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 20, 1951, edition 1
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